<p>Hours after the Taliban overran his hometown in northern Afghanistan last week, 17-year-old Abdullah was forced to ferry rocket-propelled grenades up a nearby hill -- an unwilling and terrified insurgent recruit.</p>.<p>Abdullah said he was out on the streets of Kunduz when members of the Taliban stopped him.</p>.<p>The insurgents also snatched another 30 to 40 youth, some of them boys as young as 14, from outside a madrassa (Islamic school), he said.</p>.<p>"They asked us to take up arms and join their ranks," Abdullah said. "And when our parents came to ask for our release, they threatened them with weapons."</p>.<p>The Taliban have virtually overrun the country following a lightning offensive -- supported in part by press-ganging youths like Abdullah to be used as cannon fodder.</p>.<p>Abdullah said the insurgents strapped a 20-kilogramme (44-pound) bag of RPGs onto his back, shoved a box of ammunition into each of his hands and forced him to march.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/timeline-the-talibans-sweeping-offensive-in-afghanistan-1019911.html" target="_blank">Timeline: The Taliban's sweeping offensive in Afghanistan</a></strong></p>.<p>The ordeal lasted three hours before his family was able to barter his release.</p>.<p>But as they prepared to flee, the insurgents came back for him and others.</p>.<p>"They were beating us. I still have the marks," he said.</p>.<p>An hour later, he said he was given an assault rifle and pushed into action -- ordered to help attack a police garrison.</p>.<p>"I was shaking, I couldn't hold my gun," said Abdullah, his face flushed with teenage acne.</p>.<p>The Afghan government forces fought back furiously.</p>.<p>"Three or four boys who were carrying weapons were hit and died when their bags exploded," Abdullah said.</p>.<p>"One Taliban fighter was killed, another lost a leg and an arm."</p>.<p>Abdullah saw his chance to escape when half of the Taliban fighters in his group had been killed or wounded.</p>.<p>He laid down his gun and ran, taking an hour to get home.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/afghan-president-vows-to-stop-bloodshed-as-taliban-close-in-on-kabul-1019883.html" target="_blank">Read | Afghan president vows to stop bloodshed as Taliban close in on Kabul</a></strong></p>.<p>"I was in shock," he said.</p>.<p>His family was in the throes of their own escape, preparing to seek safety in the capital Kabul. They had borrowed money and pawned off their belongings.</p>.<p>"We didn't take anything with us. We even sold our food," Abdullah said.</p>.<p>After a 15-hour journey, Abdullah, his parents, his grandfather, and his brothers and sisters reached Kabul.</p>.<p>Since then, they have been sleeping under a tent in a park in a northern suburb where they spoke with AFP.</p>.<p>Their only possessions are what they could carry.</p>.<p>Abdullah said his stomach still hurts from where the Taliban fighters hit him with the butt of their guns as he resisted being press-ganged.</p>.<p>He now dreams of getting out of Afghanistan.</p>.<p>But when he was held hostage by the Taliban, Abdullah said he was mostly terrified for his family.</p>.<p>"I was thinking about my parents," he said. "I thought: 'If I am hit and killed... what will happen to them?'"</p>
<p>Hours after the Taliban overran his hometown in northern Afghanistan last week, 17-year-old Abdullah was forced to ferry rocket-propelled grenades up a nearby hill -- an unwilling and terrified insurgent recruit.</p>.<p>Abdullah said he was out on the streets of Kunduz when members of the Taliban stopped him.</p>.<p>The insurgents also snatched another 30 to 40 youth, some of them boys as young as 14, from outside a madrassa (Islamic school), he said.</p>.<p>"They asked us to take up arms and join their ranks," Abdullah said. "And when our parents came to ask for our release, they threatened them with weapons."</p>.<p>The Taliban have virtually overrun the country following a lightning offensive -- supported in part by press-ganging youths like Abdullah to be used as cannon fodder.</p>.<p>Abdullah said the insurgents strapped a 20-kilogramme (44-pound) bag of RPGs onto his back, shoved a box of ammunition into each of his hands and forced him to march.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/timeline-the-talibans-sweeping-offensive-in-afghanistan-1019911.html" target="_blank">Timeline: The Taliban's sweeping offensive in Afghanistan</a></strong></p>.<p>The ordeal lasted three hours before his family was able to barter his release.</p>.<p>But as they prepared to flee, the insurgents came back for him and others.</p>.<p>"They were beating us. I still have the marks," he said.</p>.<p>An hour later, he said he was given an assault rifle and pushed into action -- ordered to help attack a police garrison.</p>.<p>"I was shaking, I couldn't hold my gun," said Abdullah, his face flushed with teenage acne.</p>.<p>The Afghan government forces fought back furiously.</p>.<p>"Three or four boys who were carrying weapons were hit and died when their bags exploded," Abdullah said.</p>.<p>"One Taliban fighter was killed, another lost a leg and an arm."</p>.<p>Abdullah saw his chance to escape when half of the Taliban fighters in his group had been killed or wounded.</p>.<p>He laid down his gun and ran, taking an hour to get home.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/afghan-president-vows-to-stop-bloodshed-as-taliban-close-in-on-kabul-1019883.html" target="_blank">Read | Afghan president vows to stop bloodshed as Taliban close in on Kabul</a></strong></p>.<p>"I was in shock," he said.</p>.<p>His family was in the throes of their own escape, preparing to seek safety in the capital Kabul. They had borrowed money and pawned off their belongings.</p>.<p>"We didn't take anything with us. We even sold our food," Abdullah said.</p>.<p>After a 15-hour journey, Abdullah, his parents, his grandfather, and his brothers and sisters reached Kabul.</p>.<p>Since then, they have been sleeping under a tent in a park in a northern suburb where they spoke with AFP.</p>.<p>Their only possessions are what they could carry.</p>.<p>Abdullah said his stomach still hurts from where the Taliban fighters hit him with the butt of their guns as he resisted being press-ganged.</p>.<p>He now dreams of getting out of Afghanistan.</p>.<p>But when he was held hostage by the Taliban, Abdullah said he was mostly terrified for his family.</p>.<p>"I was thinking about my parents," he said. "I thought: 'If I am hit and killed... what will happen to them?'"</p>